afsd, afsd.fuse - Initializes the Cache Manager and starts related
daemons
afsd [-afsdb] [-backuptree]
[-biods <number of bkg I/O daemons (aix vm)>]
[-blocks <1024 byte blocks in cache>]
[-cachedir <cache directory>]
[-chunksize <log(2) of chunk size>]
[-confdir <configuration directory>]
[-daemons <number of daemons to use>]
[-dcache <number of dcache entries>]
[-debug]
[-dynroot] [-dynroot-sparse] [-enable_peer_stats]
[-enable_process_stats] [-fakestat] [-fakestat-all]
[-files <files in cache>]
[-files_per_subdir <log(2) of files per dir> ]
[-help]
[-logfile <Place to keep the CM log>]
[-inumcalc] <method>
[-mem_alloc_sleep] [-memcache]
[-mountdir <mount location>]
[-nomount]
[-nosettime]
[-prealloc <number of 'small' preallocated blocks>]
[-rmtsys]
[-rootvol <name of AFS root volume>]
[-rxbind]
[-rxmaxmtu value for maximum MTU ]
[-rxpck value for rx_extraPackets ]
[-settime] [-shutdown]
[-splitcache <RW/RO ratio>]
[-stat <number of stat entries>]
[-verbose]
[-disable-dynamic-vcaches]
[-volumes <number of volume entries>]
[-waitclose] [-rxmaxfrags <max # of fragments>]
[-volume-ttl <vldb cache timeout>]
The afsd command initializes the Cache Manager on an AFS
client machine by transferring AFS-related configuration information into
kernel memory and starting several daemons. afsd.fuse is an
experimental variant that initializes a FUSE-based Cache Manager instead of
one based on a kernel module.
The afsd command performs the following actions:
- Sets a field in kernel memory that defines the machine's cell membership.
Some Cache Manager-internal operations and system calls consult this field
to learn which cell to execute in. (The AFS command interpreters refer to
the /etc/openafs/ThisCell file instead.) This information is
transferred into the kernel from the /etc/openafs/ThisCell file and
cannot be changed until the afsd program runs again.
- Places in kernel memory the names and Internet addresses of the database
server machines in the local cell and (optionally) foreign cells. The
appearance of a cell's database server machines in this list enables the
Cache Manager to contact them and to access files in the cell. Omission of
a cell from this list, or incorrect information about its database server
machines, prevents the Cache Manager from accessing files in it.
By default, the list of database server machines is
transferred into the kernel from the /etc/openafs/CellServDB
file. Alternatively, when the -afsdb option is used, the list of
database server machines is taken from the DNS SRV or AFSDB records for
each cell. After initialization, use the fs newcell command to
change the kernel-resident list without having to reboot.
- Mounts the root of the AFS filespace on a directory on the machine's local
disk, according to either the first field in the
/etc/openafs/cacheinfo file (the default) or the afsd
command's -mountdir argument. The conventional value is
/afs.
- Determines which volume to mount at the root of the AFS file tree. The
default is the volume "root.afs"; use
the -rootvol argument to override it. Although the base
(read/write) form of the volume name is the appropriate value, the Cache
Manager has a bias for accessing the read-only version of the volume (by
convention, "root.afs.readonly") if it
is available.
- Configures the cache on disk (the default) or in machine memory if the
-memcache argument is provided. In the latter case, the afsd
program allocates space in machine memory for caching, and the Cache
Manager uses no disk space for caching even if the machine has a
disk.
- Defines the name of the local disk directory devoted to caching, when the
-memcache argument is not used. If necessary, the afsd
program creates the directory (its parent directory must already exist).
It does not remove the directory that formerly served this function, if
one exists.
The second field in the /etc/openafs/cacheinfo file is
the source for this name. The standard value is /usr/vice/cache.
Use the -cachedir argument to override the value in the
cacheinfo file.
- Sets the size of the cache. The default source for the value is the third
field in the /etc/openafs/cacheinfo file, which specifies a number
of kilobytes.
For a memory cache, the following arguments to the afsd
command override the value in the cacheinfo file:
- The -blocks argument, to specify a different number of kilobyte
blocks.
- The -dcache and -chunksize arguments together, to set both
the number of dcache entries and the chunk size (see below for definition
of these parameters). In this case, the afsd program derives cache
size by multiplying the two values. Using this combination is not
recommended, as it requires the issuer to perform the calculation
beforehand to determine the resulting cache size.
- The -dcache argument by itself. In this case, the afsd
program derives cache size by multiplying the value specified by the
-dcache argument by the default memory cache chunk size of eight
kilobytes. Using this argument is not recommended, as it requires the
issuer to perform the calculation beforehand to determine the resulting
cache size.
For satisfactory memory cache performance, the specified value
must leave enough memory free to accommodate all other processes and
commands that can run on the machine. If the value exceeds the amount of
memory available, the afsd program exits without initializing the
Cache Manager and produces the following message on the standard output
stream:
afsd: memCache allocation failure at <number> KB
where <number> is how many kilobytes were allocated just
before the failure.
For a disk cache, use the -blocks argument to the
afsd command to override the value in the cacheinfo file. The
value specified in either way sets an absolute upper limit on cache size;
values provided for other arguments (such as -dcache and
-chunksize) never result in a larger cache. The afsd program
rejects any setting larger than 95% of the partition size, and exits after
generating an error message on the standard output stream, because the cache
implementation itself requires a small amount of disk space and overfilling
the partition can cause the client machine to panic.
To change the size of a disk cache after initialization without
rebooting, use the fs setcachesize command; the setting persists
until the afsd command runs again or the fs setcachesize
command is reissued. The fs setcachesize command does not work
for memory caches.
- Sets the size of each cache chunk, and by implication the amount of
data that the Cache Manager requests at a time from the File Server (how
much data per fetch RPC, since AFS uses partial file transfer).
For a disk cache, a chunk is a Vn file
and this parameter sets the maximum size to which each one can expand.
For a memory cache, each chunk is a collection of contiguous memory
blocks. The default for a disk cache is between 256 KB and 1 MB
depending on the size of the cache. The default for a memory cache is 8
KB.
To override the default chunk size for either type of cache,
use the -chunksize argument to provide an integer to be used as
an exponent of two; see "OPTIONS" for details. For a memory
cache, if total cache size divided by chunk size leaves a remainder, the
afsd program rounds down the number of dcache entries, resulting
in a slightly smaller cache.
- Sets the number of chunks in the cache. For a memory cache, the number of
chunks is equal to the cache size divided by the chunk size. For a disk
cache, the number of chunks (Vn files) is set to the
largest of the following unless the -files argument is used to set
the value explicitly:
- 100
- 1.5 times the result of dividing cache size by chunk size
(cachesize/chunksize * 1.5)
- The result of dividing cachesize by 10 KB (cachesize/10240)
- Sets the number of dcache entries allocated in machine memory for
storing information about the chunks in the cache.
For a disk cache, the /usr/vice/cache/CacheItems file
contains one entry for each Vn file. By default,
one half the number of these entries (but not more that 2,000) are
duplicated as dcache entries in machine memory for quicker access.
For a memory cache, there is no CacheItems file so all
information about cache chunks must be in memory as dcache entries.
Thus, there is no default number of dcache entries for a memory cache;
instead, the afsd program derives it by dividing the cache size
by the chunk size.
To set the number of dcache entries, use the -dcache
argument; the specified value can exceed the default limit of 2,000.
Using this argument is not recommended for either type of cache.
Increasing the number of dcache entries for a disk cache sometimes
improves performance (because more entries are retrieved from memory
rather than from disk), but only marginally. Using this argument for a
memory cache requires the issuer to calculate the cache size by
multiplying this value by the chunk size.
- Sets the number of stat entries available in machine memory for
caching status information about cached AFS files. The default is based on
the size of the cache. Use the -stat argument to override the
default.
In addition to setting cache configuration parameters, the
afsd program starts the following daemons. (On most system types,
these daemons appear as nameless entries in the output of the UNIX ps
command.)
- One callback daemon, which handles callbacks. It also responds to
the File Server's periodic probes, which check that the client machine is
still alive.
- One maintenance daemon, which performs the following tasks:
- Garbage collects obsolete data (for example, expired tokens) from kernel
memory.
- Synchronizes files.
- Refreshes information from read-only volumes once per hour.
- Does delayed writes for NFS clients if the machine is running the NFS/AFS
Translator.
- One cache-truncation daemon, which flushes the cache when free
space is required, by writing cached data and status information to the
File Server.
- One server connection daemon, which sends a probe to the File
Server every few minutes to check that it is still accessible.
- One or more background daemons that improve performance by
pre-fetching files and performing background (delayed) writes of saved
data into AFS.
The default number of background daemons is two, enough to
service at least five simultaneous users of the machine. To increase the
number, use the -daemons argument. A value greater than six is
not generally necessary.
- On some system types, one Rx listener daemon, which listens for
incoming RPCs.
- On some system types, one Rx event daemon, which reviews the Rx
system's queue of tasks and performs them as appropriate. Most items in
the queue are retransmissions of failed packets.
- On machines that run AIX with virtual memory (VM) integration, one or more
VM daemons (sometimes called I/O daemons, which transfer
data between disk and machine memory. The number of them depends on the
setting of the -biods and -daemons arguments:
- If the -biods argument is used, it sets the number of VM
daemons.
- If only the -daemons argument is used, the number of VM daemons is
twice the number of background daemons.
- If neither argument is used, there are five VM daemons.
afsd.fuse is a variant of afsd that, instead of
initializing a Cache Manager implemented as a kernel module, initializes a
FUSE-based AFS client. FUSE (Filesystem in USErspace) is a Linux-only
mechanism for providing a file system through a purely user-space daemon
without a kernel module component. afsd.fuse takes all of the same
options as afsd.
This command does not use the syntax conventions of the AFS
command suites. Provide the command name and all option names in full.
Before using the -shutdown parameter, use the standard UNIX
umount command to unmount the AFS root directory (by convention,
/afs). On Linux, unloading the AFS kernel module and then loading it
again before restarting AFS after -shutdown is recommended.
AFS has for years had difficulties with being stopped and
restarted without an intervening reboot. While most of these issues have
been ironed out, stopping and restarting AFS is not recommended unless
necessary and rebooting before restarting AFS is still the safest course of
action. This does not apply to Linux; it should be safe to restart the AFS
client on Linux without rebooting.
In contrast to many client-server applications, not all
communication is initiated by the client. When the AFS client opens a file,
it registers a callback with the AFS server. If the file changes, the server
notifies the client that the file has changed and that all cached copies
should be discarded. In order to enable full functionality on the AFS
client, including all command-line utilities, the following UDP ports must
be open on an firewalls between the client and the server:
fileserver 7000/udp
cachemanager 7001/udp (OpenAFS client. Arla uses 4711/udp)
ptserver 7002/udp
vlserver 7003/udp
kaserver 7004/udp (not needed with Kerberos v5)
volserver 7005/udp
reserved 7006/udp (for future use)
bosserver 7007/udp
Clients will also need to be able to contact your Kerberos KDC to
authenticate. If you are using kaserver and klog, you need to
allow inbound and outbound UDP on ports >1024 (probably
1024<port<2048 would suffice depending on the number of simultaneous
klogs).
Be sure to set the UDP timeouts on the firewall to be at least
twenty minutes for the best callback performance.
afsd.fuse was first introduced in OpenAFS 1.5.74. It is
only available if OpenAFS was built with the
"--enable-fuse-client" configure switch.
It should be considered experimental.
- -afsdb
- Enable afsdb support. This will use DNS to lookup the SRV or AFSDB records
and use that for the database servers for each cell instead of the values
in the CellServDB file. This has the advantage of only needing to
update one set of DNS records to reconfigure the AFS clients for a new
database server as opposed to touching all of the clients, and also allows
one to access a cell without preconfiguring its database servers in
CellServDB. The format of SRV records is defined in RFC 5864, and
the AFSDB record format is in RFC 1183.
- -backuptree
- Prefer backup volumes for mountpoints in backup volumes. This option means
that the AFS client will prefer to resolve mount points to backup volumes
when a parent of the current volume is a backup volume. This is similar to
the standard behaviour of preferring read-only volumes over read-write
volumes when the parent volume is a read-only volume.
- -biods <number
of I/O daemons>
- Sets the number of VM daemons dedicated to performing I/O operations on a
machine running a version of AIX with virtual memory (VM) integration. If
both this argument and the -daemons argument are omitted, the
default is five. If this argument is omitted but the -daemons
argument is provided, the number of VM daemons is set to twice the value
of the -daemons argument.
- -blocks
<blocks in cache>
- Specifies the number of kilobyte blocks to be made available for caching
in the machine's cache directory (for a disk cache) or memory (for a
memory cache), overriding the default defined in the third field of the
/etc/openafs/cacheinfo file. For a disk cache, the value cannot
exceed 95% of the space available in the cache partition. If using a
memory cache, do not combine this argument with the -dcache
argument, since doing so can possibly result in a chunk size that is not
an exponent of 2.
- -cachedir
<cache directory>
- Names the local disk directory to be used as the cache. This value
overrides the default defined in the second field of the
/etc/openafs/cacheinfo file.
- -chunksize
<chunk size>
- Sets the size of each cache chunk. The integer provided, which must be
from the range 0 to 30, is
used as an exponent on the number 2. If not supplied, a default chunksize
will be determined based on the cache type and cache size, and will range
from 13 (8KB) for memory cache and
18 to 20 (256 KB to 1MB)
for disk cache. A value of 0 or less, or greater
than 30, sets chunk size to the appropriate
default. Values less than 10 (which sets chunk
size to a 1 KB) are not recommended. Combining this argument with the
-dcache argument is not recommended because it requires that the
issuer calculate the cache size that results.
-chunksize is an important option when tuning for
performance. Setting this option to larger values can increase
performance when dealing with large files.
- -confdir
<configuration directory>
- Names a directory other than the /etc/openafs directory from which
to fetch the cacheinfo, ThisCell, and CellServDB
configuration files.
- -daemons
<number of daemons to use>
- Specifies the number of background daemons to run on the machine. These
daemons improve efficiency by doing prefetching and background writing of
saved data. This value overrides the default of 2,
which is adequate for a machine serving up to five users. Values greater
than 6 are not generally more effective than
6.
Note: On AIX machines with integrated virtual memory (VM), the
number of VM daemons is set to twice the value of this argument, if it
is provided and the -biods argument is not. If both arguments are
omitted, there are five VM daemons.
- -dcache
<number of dcache entries>
- Sets the number of dcache entries in memory, which are used to store
information about cache chunks. For a disk cache, this overrides the
default, which is 50% of the number of Vn files
(cache chunks). For a memory cache, this argument effectively sets the
number of cache chunks, but its use is not recommended, because it
requires the issuer to calculate the resulting total cache size (derived
by multiplying this value by the chunk size). Do not combine this argument
with the -blocks argument, since doing so can possibly result in a
chunk size that is not an exponent of 2.
- -debug
- Generates a highly detailed trace of the afsd program's actions on
the standard output stream. The information is useful mostly for debugging
purposes.
- -dynroot
- The standard behaviour of the AFS client without the -dynroot
option is to mount the root.afs volume from the default cell on the
/afs path. The /afs folder and root.afs volume traditionally
shows the folders for ThisCell and other cells as configured by the
AFS cell administrator.
The -dynroot option changes this. Using this option,
the AFS client does not mount the root.afs volume on /afs.
Instead it uses the contents of the CellServDB file to populate
the listing of cells in /afs. This is known as a DYNamic ROOT. A
cell is not contacted until the path /afs/cellname
if accessed. This functions similarly to an automounter. The main
advantage of using -dynroot is that the AFS client will start
properly even without network access, whereas the client not using
-dynroot will freeze upon startup if cannot contact the default
cell specified in ThisCell and mount the root.afs volume. Dynamic
root mode is also sometimes called travelling mode because it works well
for laptops which don't always have network connectivity.
Two advantages of not using dynroot are that listing
/afs will usually be faster because the contents of /afs
are limited to what the AFS administrator decides and that symbolic
links are traditionally created by the AFS administrator to provide a
short name for the cell (i.e. cellname.domain.com is aliased to
cellname). However, with dynroot, the local system administrator can
limit the default contents of /afs by installing a stripped-down
CellServDB file, and if dynroot is in effect, the
CellAlias file can be used to provide shortname for common AFS
cells which provides equivalent functionality to the most commonly used
symbolic links.
When the dynamic root (-dynroot,
-dynroot-sparse) and the fake stat (-fakestat,
-fakestat-all) modes are in effect, the cache manager provides a
special directory named /afs/.:mount which allows access to
volumes by volume name or ID. The /afs/.:mount directory appears
to be empty, but any name in the form of cell:volume will
be resolved as a read-write mount point to the specified volume. For
example, the user.jdoe volume in the example.com cell
would be accessible at the following path:
/afs/.:mount/example.com:user.jdoe. This dynamic mount feature is
recommended only for temporary access to a volume. Linux-based cache
managers provide this dynamic mount feature even when dynamic root
(-dynroot, -dynroot-sparse) is not in effect.
- -dynroot-sparse
- In addition to operating in the manner described for dynroot above, cells
other than the local cell are not shown by default until a lookup occurs.
Cell aliases as set in the CellAliases file are shown as normal, although
they may appear to be dangling links until traversed.
- -enable_peer_stats
- Activates the collection of Rx statistics and allocates memory for their
storage. For each connection with a specific UDP port on another machine,
a separate record is kept for each type of RPC (FetchFile, GetStatus, and
so on) sent or received. To display or otherwise access the records, use
the Rx Monitoring API.
- -enable_process_stats
- Activates the collection of Rx statistics and allocates memory for their
storage. A separate record is kept for each type of RPC (FetchFile,
GetStatus, and so on) sent or received, aggregated over all connections to
other machines. To display or otherwise access the records, use the Rx
Monitoring API.
- -fakestat
- Return fake values for stat calls on cross-cell mounts. This option makes
an "ls -l" of /afs much faster
since each cell isn't contacted, and this and the -fakestat-all
options are useful on Mac OS X so that the Finder program doesn't try to
contact every AFS cell the system knows about.
Note that, for the purposes of -fakestat, local
cellular mounts count as "cross-cell" mounts. That is, if the
local cell is "localcell", a mount for
"localcell:root.cell" will count as a
"cross-cell" mount and so stat calls for it will be faked with
-fakestat. In practice, local cellular mounts are rare and
generally discouraged, so this should not generally make a
difference.
- -fakestat-all
- Return fake values for stat calls on all mounts, not just cross-cell
mounts. This and the -fakestat options are useful on Mac OS X so
that the Finder program doesn't hang when browsing AFS directories.
- -files <files
in cache>
- Specifies the number of Vn files to create in the
cache directory for a disk cache, overriding the default that is
calculated as described in "DESCRIPTION". Each
Vn file accommodates a chunk of data, and can grow to
a maximum size of 64 KB by default. Do not combine this argument with the
-memcache argument.
- -files_per_subdir
<files per cache subdirectory>
- Limits the number of cache files in each subdirectory of the cache
directory. The value of the option should be the base-two log of the
number of cache files per cache subdirectory (so 10 for 1024 files, 14 for
16384 files, and so forth).
- -help
- Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are
ignored.
- -logfile
<log file location>
- This option is obsolete and no longer has any effect.
- -inumcalc
<method>
- Specifies the method used by the Cache Manager to generate inode numbers
for files, directories, and symlinks in the AFS filesystem. Valid methods
are "compat" and
"md5". The default method is
"compat".
When the "compat" method is
in effect, the Cache Manager generates inode numbers for a given inode
by multiplying the AFS volume number by 65536, adding the result to the
AFS vnode number, and finally truncating the result to a signed 32 bit
integer.
When the "md5" method is in
effect, the Cache Manager generates inode numbers for a given inode by
calculating the MD5 digest of a combination of the cell number, volume
number, and vnode number. The result is truncated to a signed 32 bit
integer. The "md5" method is
computationally more expensive but greatly reduces the chance for inode
number collisions, especially when volumes from multiple cells are
mounted within the AFS filesystem.
- -mem_alloc_sleep
- This option is obsolete and no longer has any effect.
- -memcache
- Initializes a memory cache rather than a disk cache. Do not combine this
flag with the -files argument.
- -mountdir
<mount location>
- Names the local disk directory on which to mount the root of the AFS
filespace. This value overrides the default defined in the first field of
the /etc/openafs/cacheinfo file. If a value other than the
/afs directory is used, the machine cannot access the filespace of
cells that do use that value.
- -nomount
- Do not mount AFS on startup. The afs global mount must be mounted via some
other means. This is useful on Mac OS X where /afs is sometimes mounted in
/Network/afs like other network file systems.
- -nosettime
- This option is obsolete and no longer has any effect. The operating system
provided time keeping daemons should be used to maintain the system
time.
- -prealloc
<number of preallocated blocks>
- Specifies the number of pieces of memory to preallocate for the Cache
Manager's internal use. The default initial value is
400, but the Cache Manager dynamically allocates
more memory as it needs it.
- -rmtsys
- Initializes an additional daemon to execute AFS-specific system calls on
behalf of NFS client machines. Use this flag only if the machine is an
NFS/AFS translator machine serving users of NFS client machines who
execute AFS commands.
- -rootvol
<name of AFS root volume>
- Names the read/write volume corresponding to the root directory for the
AFS file tree (which is usually the /afs directory). This value
overrides the default of the "root.afs"
volume. This option is ignored if -dynroot is given.
- -rxbind
- Bind the Rx socket (one interface only).
- -rxmaxfrags
<max # of fragments>
- Set a limit for the maximum number of UDP fragments Rx will send per Rx
packet, and the maximum number of fragments Rx thinks it can receive when
advertising its receive size to peers. Practically speaking, setting this
option means that you will not see Rx data packets that are broken into
more than N fragments, where N is the value specified for this option.
Setting this option to 1 effectively prevents fragmentation, and can be
useful when dealing with networking equipment that does not properly
handle UDP fragments.
Note that this option just specifies a maximum. The actual
number of fragments seen on the wire may be less than what is specified,
depending on the configuration of the peer.
- -rxmaxmtu
<value for maximum MTU>
- Set a limit for the largest maximum transfer unit (network packet size)
that the AFS client on this machine will be willing to transmit. This
switch can be used where an artificial limit on the network precludes
packets as large as the discoverable MTU from being transmitted
successfully.
- -rxpck <value
for rx_extraPackets>
- Set rx_extraPackets to this value. This sets the number of extra Rx packet
structures that are available to handle Rx connections. This value should
be increased if the "rxdebug 127.0.0.1 -port 7001 -rxstats"
command shows no free Rx packets. Increasing this value may improve
OpenAFS client performance in some circumstances.
- -settime
- This option is obsolete and no longer has any effect. The operating system
provided time keeping daemons should be used to maintain the system
time.
- -shutdown
- Shuts down the Cache Manager. Before calling afsd with this option,
unmount the AFS file system with umount.
- -splitcache
<RW/RO Ratio>
- This allows the user to set a certain percentage of the AFS cache be
reserved for read/write content and the rest to be reserved for read-only
content. The ratio should be written as a fraction. For example,
"-splitcache 75/25" devotes 75% of your
cache space to read/write content and 25% to read-only.
- -stat <number of
stat entries>
- Specifies the number of entries to allocate in the machine's memory for
recording status information about the AFS files in the cache. If this
value is not specified, the number of stat entires will be autotuned based
on the size of the disk cache.
- -verbose
- Generates a detailed trace of the afsd program's actions on the
standard output stream.
- -volumes
<number of volume entries>
- Specifies the number of memory structures to allocate for storing volume
location information. The default value is
200.
- -disable-dynamic-vcaches
- By default, dynamic vcache overrides the -stat option by using the
value of -stat (or the default) as the initial size of the stat (or
vcache) pool and increases the pool dynamically as needed on supported
platforms. This flag will disable this new functionality and honor the
'-stat' setting.
- -waitclose
- Has no effect on the operation of the Cache Manager. The behavior it
affected in previous versions of the Cache Manager, to perform synchronous
writes to the File Server, is now the default behavior. To perform
asynchronous writes in certain cases, use the fs storebehind
command.
- -volume-ttl
- Specifies the maximum amount of time the Cache Manager will cache volume
information retrieved from VL Servers.
By default, the Cache Manager will cache read-only volume
information as long as a volume callback is held for that volume. The
callback may be held as long as files in the read-only volume are being
accessed, with no upper limit. For read/write volumes, by default the
Cache Manager will cache volume information forever, until a fileserver
returns a volume-level error in response to accessing files in that
volume.
Use the -volume-ttl option to specify the maximum
amount of time in seconds that volume information will be cached,
regardless of connectivity to the fileservers. Lowering this value can
make the Cache Manager recover more quickly from certain
volume/fileserver errors, but will increase the load on the VL Servers
for contacted cells.
A typical value is 7200 seconds (2 hours), which is the same
as the default callback duration for read-only volumes. The minimum
valid value is 600 seconds (10 minutes).
The afsd command is normally included in the machine's AFS
initialization file, rather than typed at the command shell prompt. For most
disk caches, the appropriate form is
% /etc/openafs/afsd
The following command is appropriate when enabling a machine to
act as an NFS/AFS Translator machine serving more than five users.
% /etc/openafs/afsd -daemons 4 -rmtsys
The following command initializes a memory cache and sets chunk
size to 16 KB (2^14).
% /etc/openafs/afsd -memcache -chunksize 14
The issuer must be logged in as the local superuser root.
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